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Rudell Stitch, a welterweight who used to spar with Muhammad Ali, died in 1960 at the age of 27 while trying to save a friend from drowning. He was honored last year as part of Louisville’s Hometown Heroes banner program.

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We take a look back at the remarkable career of the late Grady Nutt, minister, author and beloved television personality, whose winning blend of Christian comedy made him a regular on shows like "Hee Haw" and "The Mike Douglas Show."

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History comes alive through an examination with host Barry Bernson of the artifacts around us. Included are modern Kentucky icons: Bill Monroe's mandolin, Harland Sanders' original pressure cooker, and an Adolph Rupp model basketball. The objects span the course of time from 1000 A.D. to 2013, from a stone axe to a space satellite.

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Family Scholar House in Louisville works to end the cycle of poverty by providing housing and educational support to single-parent students and their families. KET's Renee Shaw examines the group's impact on families and the community with Cathe Dykstra, chief possibility officer, president & CEO of the organization.

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Substitute host Renee Shaw and her guests discuss jobs and wages. Scheduled guests: Jason Bailey, executive director of the Kentucky Center for Economic Policy; Brian Strow, economics professor at Western Kentucky University and policy scholar for the Bluegrass Institute for Public Policy Solutions; Caitlin Lally, communications director for United Food and Commercial Workers Local 227; and Julia Crigler, state director of Americans for Prosperity.

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Meet award-winning artist Steve White of Mason County, whose paintings reflect America's first frontier from 1760-1812. Amy Hess visits downtown Paris. The Potter's Inn Bed and Breakfast offers art and hospitality in Wilmore. And a once-forgotten Civil War tragedy, the massacre of the 5th U.S. Colored Cavalry in Simpsonville, is memorialized in Shelby County.